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RESOLUTION 1325
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WOMEN ACT AGAINST REPRESSION AND
INTIMIDATION IN IRAN
February 28. 2008 (Amnesty) The Iranian authorities
are continuing to harass activists working to defend women’s
rights. Ronak Safarzadeh and Hana Abdi – two Kurdish Iranian
activists – currently remain detained without charge or trial.
They were arrested in October and November 2007 for peacefully exercising
their rights.
The two activists were working as part of The Campaign for Equality,
an Iranian women’s rights initiative. Launched in 2006, the
campaign aims to collect one million signatures of Iranian nationals
to a petition demanding an end to legal discrimination against women
in Iran. The group also provides legal training to volunteers –
both women and men – who then travel across the country to
promote the campaign, and talk to women about their rights and the
need for legal reform.
Women in Iran face far-reaching discrimination under the law. They
are denied equal rights in marriage, divorce, child custody and
inheritance. Evidence given by a woman in court is considered only
worth half that given by a man. A girl under the age of 13 can be
forced to marry a much older man if her father permits it.
With the increase in women’s literacy in the last 30 years
and the large number of women students at university, women are
increasingly empowered to challenge discrimination. But their efforts
are viewed with suspicion by the authorities, who have launched
a campaign of intimidation and repression against them. The campaign’s
website has been blocked at least seven times by the authorities
and its activists are being targeted because of their work.
In August 2007, Nasim Sarabandi and Fatemeh Dehdashti were the first
women among the campaign’s activists to receive prison sentences.
Detained for 24 hours in January 2007 while collecting signatures
in Tehran, they were later sentenced to six months’ imprisonment,
suspended for two years, after being charged with “acting
against state security by propaganda against the system”.
Over 40 others have been detained in connection with their campaigning
activities, including Reza Dowlatshah. He was hosting an educational
workshop for the campaign in September 2007, when he was detained
for three days and beaten.
Although the obstacles are many, activists are still willing to
risk their safety to bring about a fundamental change in how the
Iranian authorities treat Iran’s women. As Shadi Sadr, a lawyer
currently facing possible imprisonment for her human rights work,
says: “My grandmother wasn’t allowed the life she wanted.
I was lucky. I achieved everything but the struggle was still hard.
I didn’t want the dearest person in my life [my daughter]
to have the same troubles.”
These sentiments are echoed by former Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Shirin Ebadi, “We are a nation bursting with female ability.
We are a country blessed with hard-working women desperate to make
a contribution, but one hobbled by legalised prejudice and social
bigotry. Now more than ever, the women of Iran deserve our support”.
Rather than using its power to repress and intimidate those who
protest and demand their rights, Iran’s government should
see the work of women’s rights activists and human rights
defenders as an asset, and recognize the important contribution
that such activists and defenders are making to address discrimination
and intolerance and to promote universal human rights for all Iranians.
Amnesty International has called on the government of Iran must
take urgent steps to:
dismantle discriminatory legislation
release imprisoned women’s rights defenders and stop detaining
and harassing those peacefully exercising their rights to freedom
of expression, association and assembly.
From:http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/report/women-act-against-repression-and-intimidation-iran-20080228
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